TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates in general to semiconductor devices, and in particular to
an improved method for forming local interconnects using chlorine bearing agents.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] By increasing the number of levels of interconnects in integrated circuits provides
additional routing capability, more compact layouts, better circuit performance and
greater use of circuit design within a given integrated circuit surface area. A particularly
useful level of connection is commonly called local interconnection, where neighboring
diffused areas are connected to one another, and to neighboring polysilicon and metal
lines.
[0003] For example, a conventional method for creating local interconnects uses metal interconnection
of diffused regions to one another, as well as to other layers. The metal interconnection
is formed by etching vias through a thick oxide layer to the locations to be interconnected.
A conductor is then formed to fill the vias and make the connection. This method is
limited, for purposes of reducing the area required for such connection, by the state
of the technology of etching contact holes and the planarization of interlevel dielectrics.
These limitations include the alignment tolerance of the vias to the underlying region
to be connected, the size of the via required (and accordingly the size of the contact
area in the underlying region) which can be reliably etched, and the step coverage
of the conductor in filling the via and making good ohmic contact to the underlying
region. Also, the additional layer of a metallic conductor across the dielectric contributes
to a loss of planarization in subsequent levels.
[0004] As alternative method developed by Hewlett Packard and published at page 118 of the
1984 IEDM Proceedings uses additional patterned silicon to provide conductive silicide
regions extending over the field oxide as desired. A layer of titanium is deposited
over the substrate and, prior to the direct reaction of the titanium with the underlying
silicon to form the silicide, a thin layer of silicon is patterned on top of the titanium
metal to define an interconnect extending over a silicon dioxide region separating
the two regions to be interconnected. Where this silicon layer remains, a silicide
is formed during the reaction process extending over the oxides. This method requires
the deposition and patterning of the additional layer of silicon to define the local
interconnection. In addition, the resulting silicide strap provides a conduit through
which typical n-type dopants such as phosphorous can diffuse, since titanium silicide
is a very poor diffusion barrier to conventional semiconductor dopants. If a silicide
strap is used to connect n-type regions to p-type regions, for example n-doped polysilicon
to p-type diffusion, subsequent processing must be done at relatively low temperatures
to minimize the counterdoping of the p-type region with the n-type dopant through
the silicide interconnect.
[0005] Another known method uses molybdenum metal as a local interconnect material. Molybdenum,
however, also acts as a diffusion conduit through which phosphorus, used to dope n-type
regions of the semiconductor device, can diffuse. The molybdenum interconnect therefore
is not an effective local interconnect between n-type and p-type regions, as the p-type
regions can be undesirably counterdoped by the phosphorous diffusing through the molybdenum,
similarly as the silicide strap interconnect.
[0006] Another local interconnection method is disclosed in U. S. Patent No. 4,675,073,
issued to me on June 23, 1987, and assigned to Texas Instruments Incorporated, incorporated
herein by this reference. As disclosed therein, the desired local interconnect is
formed by patterning the residual titanium compound, for example titanium nitride,
from the direct reaction forming titanium silicide cladding of the diffusions and
polysilicon gates. The titanium nitride is sufficiently conductive so that it is useful
to make local interconnections between neighboring regions. The disclosed process
uses carbon tetrafluoride (CF₄) as the reactant in a plasma etch to remove the undesired
titanium nitride faster than titanium silicide. This plasma etch using carbon tetrafluoride
etches titanium nitride or titanium oxide at approximately twice the rate it removes
titanium silicide. This technique also etches silicon oxides at twice the rate, and
photoresist at five times the rate, as it etches titanium nitride or titanium oxide.
Additionally, products of the etching process include solids that tend to adhere to
the etching device. This requires extra maintenance and cleanup time that is nonproductive.
Thus, a need has arisen for a method for producing a local interconnect with increased
selectivity to the refractory metal compound of the local interconnect (e.g., titanium
nitride or titanium oxide) relative to silicides, silicon oxides and photoresist,
so that an additional layer of interconnection may be more consistently manufactured
with precisely located interconnects and improved planarization compatible with sub-micron
technology.
[0007] It is therefore an object of this invention to provide an etch for the residual material
over insulating layers remaining from the direct react silicidation which has an increased
etch rate ration (i.e., improved selectivity) of the residual material relative to
the silicide.
[0008] It is a further object of this invention to provide such an etch which also has improved
etch selectivity (i.e., an increased etch rate ratio) of the interconnect relative
to underlying insulating layers.
[0009] It is a further object of the present invention to provide such an etch with improved
selectively to titanium nitride or titanium oxide with respect to titanium silicide,
silicon dioxide and photoresist.
[0010] It is a further object of the present invention to provide such an etch which reduces
the preventative maintenance and cleanup schedules and procedures by the use of a
chlorine bearing agent as opposed to a flourine agent.
[0011] Other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those of ordinary
skill in the art having reference to the following specification in conjunction with
the drawings.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0012] The invention may be incorporated into a method for forming a local interconnect
or a semiconductor surface is provided. A dielectric layer of a prefabricated integrated
circuit is covered with a conductive chemical compound of a refractory metal, such
a compound formed during the silicidation of the refractory metal at locations where
it is in contact with the underlying semiconductor. A patterned masking material is
formed over this chemical compound layer to protect a specific portion thereof. A
chlorine bearing agent is used to etch all of the conductive chemical compound layer
except that which is protected by the patterned masking material. The chlorine bearing
agent etches the conductive chemical compound at a greater rate than the underlying
silicide, and than the dielectric layer. The patterned masking material is removed
to expose the protected portion which forms a local interconnect on the integrated
circuit.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] For a more complete understanding of the present invention, and for further advantages
thereof, reference is now made to the following description taken in conjunction with
the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 is a cross-sectional view of a partially fabricated integrated circuit with
a titanium chemical compound formed over the entire surface;
Figure 2 is a cross-sectional view of the device of Figure 1 with patterned masking
material added over the area to be protected;
Figure 3 is a cross-sectional view of an integrated circuit with a local interconnect
formed in accordance with the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0014] Figure 1 shows the first step utilizing the method of the preferred embodiment of
the present invention, as directed to an integrated circuit wafer 44. Wafer 44 contains
a semiconducting substrate 10 formed of silicon. Field oxide 12, preferably silicon
dioxide (SiO₂), is grown or deposited in selected portions of the surface of the substrate
10 for isolation of active regions from one another according to the well known local
oxidation (LOCOS) isolation technique; of course, other isolation techniques such
as trench isolation may alternatively be used. The active transistors of the integrated
circuit device are formed into the locations of the surface of substrate 10 not covered
with field oxide 12, such locations commonly called moat regions. In Figure 1, a transistor
44 is shown having source and drain regions 14 and 16, respectively, diffused into
the moat region between two portions of field oxide 12. Source and drain regions 14
and 16 are generally implanted and subsequently diffused after the placement of polysilicon
gate electrode 30 over gate dielectric 24, so that source and drain regions 14 and
16 are self-aligned relative to gate electrode 30. As described in U.S. Patent No.
4,356,623, issued November 11, 1982 and assigned to Texas Instruments Incorporated,
the incorporation of sidewall oxide filaments 26 along the side of gate electrode
30 provide for a graded junction, as shown in Figure 1. Figure 1 further illustrates
a polysilicon layer 42 overlying field oxide 12 serving as an interconnect to another
portion of the integrated circuit, for example extending to another moat region (not
shown) and serving as the gate electrode for a transistor.
[0015] In this embodiment of the invention, source and drain regions 14 and 16, and gate
electrodes 30 and 42, are clad with a refractory metal silicide such as titanium silicide.
This cladding is performed by depositing a layer of the refractory metal, and subsequently
heating the wafer 44 so that the metal directly reacts with the underlying silicon
to form the silicide, as described in U.S. Patent No. 4,384,301, issued on May 17,
1983 and assigned to Texas Instruments Incorporated. An example of the conditions
for each direct direction is heating the wafer 44 in a nitrogen and argon ambient
at a temperature on the order of 675°C. Other methods of acheiving the direct reaction
may alternatively be used, for example, by use of a single-wafer Rapid Thermal Processor
(RTP) where the wafer 44 is rapidly heated to the appropriate temperature for a sufficient
amount of time to perform the direct reaction described above.
[0016] As described in said U.S. Patent No. 4,675,073, where titanium is used as the refractory
metal, as a result of the direct reaction process a layer of a conductive titanium
compound covers the surface of the wafer 44, including the silicide regions. Referring
to Figure 1, source region 14, drain region 16, and gate electrodes 28 and 42 are
shown clad with titanium silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40, respectively. A layer 43
of residual material containing, for example, titanium nitride if the direct reaction
is performed in a nitrogen atmosphere, remains over the surface; if a layer of oxide
(not shown) is provided over the top of the titanium metal layer prior to the direct
reaction, as described in U.S. Patent No. 4,690,730 issued September 1, 1987 and assigned
to Texas Instruments Incorporated, layer 43 may contain titanium oxide. Layer 43 will
have a thickness on the order of 100 nm over field oxide 12, and will be thinner (e.g.,
on the order of 40 nm thick) in the locations over silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40
cladding the underlying silicon or polysilicon. If desired, the thickness of layer
43 may be increased by a second deposition of titanium metal after the initial direct
reaction, followed by a second direct reaction in a nitrogen atmosphere, as described
in U.S. Patent No. 4,676,866 issued June 30, 1987 and assigned to Texas Instruments
Incorporated.
[0017] Referring to Figure 2, the next step in the preferred embodiment of the present invention
is illustrated. A layer of masking material is deposited over layer 43, and is patterned
according to conventional techniques to remain in the locations of the eventual local
interconnect, as shown by patterned masking material 46 in Figure 2. The masking material
46 serves to protect the covered portion of layer 43 from subsequent etching. The
patterned masking material 46 may be photoresist, or a hardmask material such as silicon
dioxide.
[0018] When photoresist serves as the masking material 46, it is preferable to clean the
surface of wafer 44 prior to beginning the etching process, by use of an O₂ based
resist descum to establish etch rate uniformity, to prevent extended etch initiation
periods and to eliminate post-etch scumming problems or incomplete etching of layer
48. An O₂ descum time equal to the removal of approximately 400A of resist is sufficient.
Wafer 44 is then hardbaked at 120°C for approximately 60 minutes in an oven and then
O₂ descummed again. It is necessary to redo the descum if more than at three hour
delay is incurred after the descum before the local interconnect dry etch described
below to avoid incomplete etching of the local interconnect.
[0019] After patterning masking material 46, wafer 44 is placed in any appropriate plasma
etching device such as plasma mode etcher, a reactive ion etcher or a microwave after
glow, which are well known in the art. In the preferred embodiment, a plasma mode
etcher, not shown, utilized. The plasma mode etcher comprises a symmetrical parallel
plate reactor with the substrate grounded, and functions in the plasma mode with no
DC bias on the powered electrode. The powered top plate comprises graphite or titanium,
and the bottom plate may comprise bare aluminum. The plates are spaced approximately
one centimeter apart, and approximately 200 watts of power is applied. Radio frequency
(RF) energy is transmitted between the parallel plates by an RF generator. The powered
electrode also serves as a gas dispersal source similar to a shower head. According
to the invention, a chlorine bearing agent such as carbon tetrachloride (CCl₄) is
used as the dry etch reactant in the plasma mode etcher. Wafer 44 is placed on the
grounded plate which is spaced apart from the powered plate by approximately one centimeter.
The preferred substrate temperature is on the order of 50°C.
[0020] Carbon tetrachloride is a particularly useful chlorine-bearing agent for this etch
because it generally exhibits low etch rates of photoresist and silicon dioxide. Carbon
tetrachloride also has a carbon center which will serve to "poison" the titanium silicide
first layers 20, 22, 28 and 40 once layer 43 of the titanium compound lying over them
has been etched. This poisoning, or surface passivation, is due to carbon, probably
in the form of a partially dissociated carbon tetrachloride molecule (such as CCl
x where x = 1, 2 or 3) reacting with either the titanium or the silicon in the titanium
silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40 to form silicon carbide or titanium carbide. Since
silicon carbide and titanium carbide are both nonvolatile, the reactive sites on the
titanium silicide first layers 20, 22, 28 and 40 are effectively "tied up", consumed
or covered, thus preventing reaction of layers 20, 22, 28 and 40 with the other reactive
species in the etch, namely chlorine. If not passivated, the chlorine in the etch
is capable of volatilization and etching of the titanium or the silicon in silicide
film 20, 22, 28 and 40. Moreover, the surface passivation from the chlorocarbon reagents
can be of such a magnitude that a polymer film is formed, so that the surface passivation
is on a macroscopic scale rather than a molecular scale.
[0021] Conversely, the reactive carbon containing species will react with the nitrogen component
of the titanium nitride in layer 43 to form CN, which is volatile. The residual atomic
chlorine radicals will react with the titanium compound in the titanium nitride of
layer 42 to form titanium chloride (TiCl
x where x = 1-4), which is also volatile. Thus, the titanium nitride of layer 43 which
is not protected by patterned masking material 46 will be etched, will leaving the
titanium silicide first layer 20, 22, 28 and 40, field oxide 12, and patterned masking
material 46.
[0022] In order to initiate the plasma, it is necessary to detach electrons from the chlorocarbon
anions present in the plasma gas. Because neutral chlorocarbon species have high cross-sections
for electron attachment, the reaction chamber tends to become depleted of free electrons,
which are crucial to the ignition of the plasma by the mechanism of electron-impact
ionization of other atomic and molecular species. Such electron-impact ionization
is generally required to ignite the plasma once the avalanche condition is reached.
As is well known in the art, the electron is an important charged species in plasma
ignition since its low mass allows it to be sufficiently energized by an RF electric
field to ionize a neutral species.
[0023] A useful method according to the invention for generating sufficient free electrons
to ignite the CCl₄ plasma is to illuminate the reaction chamber with a light source,
with the light having a wavelength in the range of 180 to 1200 nanometers. In the
preferred embodiment, an intense emission in the ultraviolet end of the spectrum,
such as from a mercury/argon light source, will photodetach electrons from anions
in the plasma, such anions having a high cross-section for photoelectron detachment.
Hence, the light source illumination effectively provides a sufficient free electron
concentration by photodetachment from the anions, to permit facile plasma ignition.
Alternative techniques for replenishing the free electron concentration for otherwise
detaching electrons, by introducing new electrons from an auxiliary source or by temporarily
increasing the power of operation to increase the electron energy of a deficient concentration
of electrons, can also be used for facilitating ignition.
[0024] Once the ignition begins, a plasma is formed resulting in electron-impact dissociation
of CCl
x x = 1-3, and atomic chlorine radicals. It is also advantageous to add an inert gas,
such as helium (He), argon (Ar) or nitrogen (N₂) to the carbon tetrachloride to add
stability to the plasma.
[0025] Molecular and atomic chlorine each can react with titanium or silicon to form volatile
gases. The presence of excess chlorine can thus undesirably etch titanium silicide
film 20, 22, 28, and 40. Hence, in addition to passivating the surface of silicide
film 20, 22, 28 and 40 as described above with the carbon from the CCl₄ etchant, it
is also desirable to reduce the chlorine concentration in the reaction chamber, further
improving the titanium nitride to titanium silicide etch rate ratio. This can be accomplished
by adding chlorine scavenging reagents to the carbon tetrachloride. Chlorine scavenging
reagents are reagents that react with atomic or molecular chlorine to form a relatively
inert or unreactive product, thereby reducing the amount of excess chlorine in the
chamber, in turn reducing the undesired etching of titanium or silicon in the titanium
silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40.
[0026] One method for providing such a scavenging reagent is the use of a consumable powered
electrode, such as one made from graphite or titanium, in the plasma mode etch. Chlorine
is quite reactive with this type of electrode material, depleting the chlorine concentration
in the plasma. Another method that can be utilized is to add a reagent such as chloroform
(CHCl₃), ammonia (NH₃), or cyanogen ((CN)₂) to the carbon tetrachloride. These reagents
will dissociate in the plasma mode etcher, and combine with the excess chlorine to
form either products which are inert to the silicide film, or which assist the passivation
of the silicide film. In the example where chloroform is introduced as a chlorine
scavenger, the dissociation of the chloroform liberates hydrogen which will scavenge
for chlorine to form hydrochloric acid (HCl) which is not only inert to titanium silicide
but is also volatile and easily removed from the reaction chamber. The other product
of the scavenging provided by chloroform, namely CCl₃, enhances passivation of the
titanium silicide surface and participates in etching the titanium nitride in the
same manner as the CCl₄ etchant gas. If further dry etching is required, a second
O₂ based resist descum is preferably performed prior to an additional plasma etch
step.
[0027] However, on surfaces parallel to the ion flux, such as along the sides of sidewall
filaments 26, the chlorine bearing agent may leave an interfacial film that resulted
from a reaction between the dielectric (SiO₂) and the titanium. The plasma etch eradicates
the interfacial film on surfaces disposed normal to the ion flux. Since the interfacial
film is conductive, it can cause electrical shorts, such as between gate electrode
30 and source and drain regions 14 and 16, respectively. This interfacial film, of
unknown composition but believed to be Ti
xO
ySi
z, can be removed by a wet etch process.
[0028] This wet etch process comprises placing wafer 44 in a diluted solution of, for example,
RCA (NH₄OH + H₂O₂ + H₂O) in a megasonic agitated tank, i.e., a tank agitated at a
frequency greater than 500 kHz. The RCA solution is diluted with approximately six
times more H₂O than is normally used in a typical wet etch process for etching silicon.
The megasonic tank, not shown, is commercially available with a bottom mount transducer.
The bottom mount transducer megasonic tank should be of the type that translates the
wafers in a cassette holder back-and-forth across a narrow transducer strip small
than the wafer diameter. Wafer translation prevents localized heating of the wafer
due to standing waves which contributes to early or rapid photoresist delamination.
This is in contrast to a bottom-mount megasonic tank in which the entire bottom is
a transducer and wafer translation is not part of the procedure. Wafer 44 is placed
in the tank for approximately ten minutes which will remove the interfacial film without
removing the titanium silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40 or delaminating photoresist,
if used as the masking material 46. To ensure inhibition of photoresist mask delamination,
a 60 minute, 120°C oven bake is performed after the preceding local interconnect dry
etch and prior to this wet etch.
[0029] Although the dry etch is quite anisotropic to the titanium compound layer 43, the
wet etch solution is isotropic and may slightly undercut layer 43 with respect to
the masking material 46 slightly. Therefore, it is preferably to oversize the portion
of patterned masking material 46 defining the local interconnect; for example, a local
interconnect that is 0.8 of a micron wide may require a one micron wide pattern to
masking material 46. Both the dry etch and the wet etch steps described herein are
selective to the titanium compound layer 43 relative to dielectrics, and, therefore,
the field oxide 12 and the sidewall oxides 26 and 38 remain substantially the same
height as originally applied.
[0030] After the completion of the desired etching steps, patterned masking material 46
is removed by an appropriate method, such as a solvent resist strip for photoresist
as masking material 46, as is well known in the art. After the removal of masking
material 46, the structure thus appears substantially as shown in Figure 3, with local
interconnect 48 exposed as the remaining portion of layer 43 after removing the masking
material 46. The illustrated example of local interconnect 48 extends from drain region
16, contacting silicide film 22 thereat, to contact silicide film 40 located upon
gate electrode 42. Local interconnects such as local interconnect 48 can also be used
to contact diffused regions to one another, gate electrodes to one another, and also
to provide a barrier metal to which contact vias may be etched in providing metal-to-diffusion
and metal-to-polysilicon contacts. It should be noted that the compounds described
herein for local interconnect 48, such as titanium nitride and titanium oxide, act
substantially as a diffusion barrier to phosphorous, thereby allowing contact between
phosphorous-doped n-type silicon and p-type silicon without the problem of outdiffusion
of the n-type dopant through the interconnect 48 into the p-type doped semiconductor.
[0031] For improvement of the conductivity of silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40, an anneal
process is now performed on the wafer 44. The anneal process comprises any appropriate
method such as sintering the wafer 44 in an oven at 700-800°C for approximately 30
minutes. At this point, silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40 have a change is sheet resistance
of less than or equal to 0.3 ohms per square when compared to the sheet resistance
of equivalent material that is not exposed to the dry etch.
[0032] The desired result of this method is a plasma etch of layer 43 with a high selectivity
to the silicide film 20, 22, 28, and 40. In the example where layer 43 is primarily
titanium nitride, and where silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40 is titanium silicide,
the result is an etch with a high TiN : TiSi₂ etch rate ratio. This high etch rate
ratio is important to the performance of the circuit, as such performance depends,
in part on the resistance of silicide film 20, 22, 38 and 40. Of course, the resistance
of silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40 is proportional to its thickness. For titanium
silicide, overetch of titanium silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40 by the plasma etch
for forming local interconnect 48 increases this resistance, which is undesirable.
[0033] Specific examples of the results of various embodiments of the invention are provided
hereinbelow. In a first example, the above described procedures with no introduced
chlorine scavenging reagents, other than that provided by a graphite top powered electrode
graphite was used. Wafer 44 had titanium silicide film 20, 22, 28 and 40, and titanium
nitride layer 43. Photoresist was used as masking material 46.
[0034] The process conditions were:
Carbon tetrachloride flow - |
80 SCCM |
He flow - |
30 SCCM |
Pressure - |
350 millitorr |
Grounded electrode and |
200 watts |
wafer 44 temperature - |
50°C |
Top powered electrode temperature - |
50°C |
[0035] The resultant etch rates produced were:
Titanium nitride - |
5500 |
A per minute |
Titanium silicide - |
800 |
A per minute |
Oxide - |
300 |
A per minute |
Photoresist - |
200 |
A per minute |
[0036] It can be seen that even without the additional chlorine scavenging reagent such
as chloroform an etch rate of roughly 7 to 1 is achieved. Further testing with chloroform
added has shown that a 20 to 1 etch rate of titanium nitride to titanium silicide
is possible.
[0037] Other tests have been conducted to verify the selectivity of the CCl₄ etch to titanium
nitride relative to titanium silicide. These tests measured the amount of titanium
silicide etched by measuring a change in sheet resistance of the silicide film. The
delta in sheet resistance for a given etch time (pre-etch to post-etch) varies with
the amount of TiSi₂ etched (i.e., the delta in thickness of the TiSi₂ film due to
the etch). In the results of group A below, the chloroform flow rate was varied to
determine the amount to TiSi₂ etched as a function of chloroform flow rate. In the
results of group B below, the electrode material was changed, with no chloroform used,
to determine the dependency of the TiSi₂ of the electrode material. In all examples,
the etch time plus overetch time is the time required to clear TiN layer 43.
A. Chloroform flow rate (SCCM) |
Etch time (seconds) |
Overetch time (seconds) |
Change in sheet resistance (ohms/square) |
0 |
15 |
5 |
2.3 |
5 |
15 |
5 |
1.5 |
10 |
15 |
5 |
1.1 |
20 |
14 |
5 |
1.0 |

[0038] In an alternative embodiment, the titanium layer is covered with a silicon oxide
or silicon nitride capping layer prior to the heating reaction to form titanium oxide
(TiO) rather than titanium nitride. The silicon oxide layer is removed after reaction
in a furnance with a nitrogen ambient at 650°C. The titanium oxide is also conductive
and forms a local interconnect after being processed in the same fashion as the titanium
nitride.
[0039] In this embodiment, the titanium oxide is etched with carbon tetrachloride using
the same process as previously described above. Instead of forming CN, however, carbon
monoxide (CO) is formed, while all other reactions are essentially the same.
[0040] Although the present invention has been described with respect to a specific preferred
embodiment thereof, various changes and modifications may be suggested to one skilled
in the art, and it is intended that the present invention encompass such changes and
modifications as fall within the scope of the appended claims.
1. A method for dry etching a conductive titanium chemical compound formed over a
dielectric and a silicide on a semiconductor surface, comprising the steps of:
disposing the semiconductor surface within a plasma etcher;
flowing a chlorine bearing agent into said plasma etcher and over the semiconductor
surface;
igniting said chlorine bearing agent to form plasma; and
etching the titanium chemical compound with said plasma without undesirably etching
the dielectric from the semiconductor surface.
2. The method of Claim 1, wherein the chemical compound is titanium nitride or titanium
oxide.
3. The method of Claim 1, further comprising: mixing a chlorine scavenging reagent
with the chlorine bearing agent in said flowing step.
4. The method of Claim 1, wherein the chlorine bearing agent is carbon tetrachloride.
5. The method of Claim 4, wherein the step of flowing further includes mixing an inert
gas with said carbon tetrachloride.
6. The method of Claim 1, wherein the step of igniting comprises passing radio frequency
energy through said plasma etcher.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the step of igniting further includes shining ultraviolet
light through said plasma etcher.
8. A method for forming a local interconnect at a silicon surface, comprising the
steps of:
forming an insulating layer over a selected location of said surface;
forming a layer of titanium silicide in contact with the silicon surface at a location
adjacent said insulating layer;
forming an interconnect layer of material comprising titanium over said titanium silicide
and said insulating layer;
forming a protective masking material over a specific portion of said interconnect
layer to define an interconnect; and
etching said interconnect layer with a chlorine bearing agent in a plasma reactor
to remove all of said interconnect layer except said defined interconnect.
9. The method of Claim 8, wherein the steps of forming said titanium silicide layer
and said interconnect layer comprises:
depositing a layer of titanium over the silicon surface and said insulating layer;
reacting said titanium is a nitrogen and argon ambient at a temperature sufficient
to cause the titanium layer to react with said silicon surface to form a layer of
titanium silicide covered with a layer of titanium nitride, and to form a layer of
titanium nitride over said insulating layer.
10. The method of Claim 9, wherein the step of etching further includes passivating
said titanium silicide with radicals dissociated from said chlorine bearing agent.
11. The method of Claim 8, wherein the step of forming a protective masking material
over a specific portion of said second layer comprises patterning photoresist over
said second layer.
12. The method of Claim 8, wherein the step of etching comprises plasma etching with
carbon tetrachloride.
13. The method of Claim 12, wherein the step of etching further includes mixing a
chlorine scavenging reagent with aid carbon tetrachloride.
14. The method of Claim 13, wherein the step of etching further includes mixing an
inert gas with said carbon tetrachloride.
15. The method of Claim 12, wherein the step of etching further includes providing
an electrode in said plasma reactor which reacts with chlorine.
16. The method of Claim 12, wherein the step of etching further includes igniting
said carbon tetrachloride to form plasma by adding a mercury/argon ultraviolet light
source.
17. The method of Claim 8, wherein the steps of forming said titanium silicide layer
and said interconnect layer comprises:
depositing a layer of titanium over the silicon surface and said insulating layer;
depositing silicon oxide over said titanium; and
reacting said titanium is a nitrogen and argon ambient at a furnance at approximately
650°C to cause the titanium layer to react with said silicon surface to form a layer
of titanium silicide covered with a layer of titanium oxide, and to form a layer of
titanium oxide over said insulating layer.
18. The method of Claim 8, further comprising:
wet etching with a water diluted ammonium hydroxide/hydrogen peroxide solution in
an agitated tank having a bottom-mounted transducer, after said etching step.
19. A method for etching a material disposed on a semiconductor wafer, comprising:
disposing the wafer within a reactor chamber;
flowing an etchant gas into said reactor chamber;
illuminating the reactor chamber with a light source to cause the etchant gas to form
a plasma.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the etchant gas is a chlorine-bearing agent.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the etchant gas is CCl₄.
22. The method of claim 20, wherein the light from the light source has a wavelength
in the range of 180 to 1200 nanometers.
23. The method of claim 20, wherein the material to be etched comprises a conductive
refractory metal compound.
24. The method of claim 23, wherein the refractory metal in the conductive refractory
metal compound is titanium.
25. The method of claim 24, wherein the conductive refractory metal compound comprises
titanium nitride.
26. The method of claim 24, wherein the conductive refractory metal compound comprises
titanium oxide.